and pretending the game doesnt exist and spitting in its face doesnt get you far towards winning the game.
its not about being afraid to speak the truth, its about being smart and not sabotaging yourself.
why speak the truth and lose when you can hold onto that truth, and be smart, and say the right things, and win?
the connection of gun free zones isnt the issue, and even bringing up that issue when there are many things they could have said to make people on the other side more sympathetic to the cause is just a smarter move.
its great to stand up for what you believe in. but sometimes its smarter to hold your tongue.
What you're proposing sounds a lot like prevaricating, and this debate will not be won by people who fib, or tell half-truths. Entering the discussion with talking points that are deliberately intended to deflect from the facts, for whatever reason, will not be well-received. Telling people that we should be allowed to have guns because it's our right won't make a bit of difference. The fact is, nobody cares about your rights, especially when the Brady Bunch are running around doing their damnedest to convince them that your rights pose a clear and present danger to the health and well-being of their children. We have to clearly highlight the fact that, aside from being a basic human right, allowing people to be armed for self-defense makes society safer. Anything less is a losing proposition.
While we're on the subject, here's why I'm extraordinarily hesitant to endorse the calls for improved "mental health reporting". What most of these people are actually proposing is that we give unquestioned authority to strip Constitutional rights to every mental health provider in the country. Every shooter is described as "troubled" or "unstable". No shit. The guy just killed 26 people, I'd say he was damn sure unstable. What were the warning signs? A lot of these guys acted screwy, and in hindsight it's pretty clear that they were nuts, but without the benefit of hindsight, how will we enforce this mental health reporting? Will we take away guns from everyone who ever caused a scene in a college classroom? Everyone who's undergoing treatment for any kind of disorder, regardless how mild, be it depression, PTSD, or anxiety? Again, in hindsight most of these guys seem like they're destined for a school shooting, but are we willing to strip the rights of the hundreds of thousands of people just like them who were never going to go on a rampage?
Here's why the Brady Campaign wants to improve "mental health reporting": everybody's crazy. If they can get it on the books that all it takes to justify confiscation of your guns is the opinion of a psychiatrist, they've more or less won all the marbles, because everyone can be diagnosed with some disorder or other. Even if they wrote it to only include straight-up crazy people who think they're Batman, I'd be concerned about the legislative updates down the road to include PTSD, or depression, or anxiety, or any of the other 297 disorders currently listed in the DSM. The DSM describes mental disorders as follows: "there is no assumption that each category of mental disorder is a completely discrete entity with absolute boundaries dividing it from other mental disorders or from no mental disorder". In other words, the difference between crazy and sane is pretty darned fuzzy.